Omega Owners Forum

Omega Help Area => Omega General Help => Topic started by: cambscdxv6 on 26 April 2011, 22:39:38

Title: Insurance
Post by: cambscdxv6 on 26 April 2011, 22:39:38
Hello all from a new member !!

i recently purchased a very tidy 1999 v6 CDX estate auto but have been met by a brick wall on insurance i am horrified by the cost roughly twice as much as the car is worth with an excess just shy of the car value.  Im in my thirties with a clean licence but no ncd due to being a company car driver for 12 years,  any suggestions or reccomendation of insurers that can offer a good deal ?????
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: RobG on 26 April 2011, 22:41:45
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Hello all from a new member !!

i recently purchased a very tidy 1999 v6 CDX estate auto but have been met by a brick wall on insurance i am horrified by the cost roughly twice as much as the car is worth with an excess just shy of the car value.  Im in my thirties with a clean licence but no ncd due to being a company car driver for 12 years,  any suggestions or reccomendation of insurers that can offer a good deal ?????
Due to that, you`ll struggle to get a decent quote for a group 15 motor :(
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: Andy B on 26 April 2011, 22:45:57
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Hello all from a new member !!

i recently purchased a very tidy 1999 v6 CDX estate auto but have been met by a brick wall on insurance i am horrified by the cost roughly twice as much as the car is worth with an excess just shy of the car value.  Im in my thirties with a clean licence but no ncd due to being a company car driver for 12 years,  any suggestions or reccomendation of insurers that can offer a good deal ?????
Due to that, you`ll struggle to get a decent quote for a group 15 motor :(

But most insurance companies will allow for ex-company car drivers not having their own ncd & give a decent introductory price. We had this year ago when SWMBO got her own car till I said that she's been driving for years but on my insurance.
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: VXL V6 on 26 April 2011, 22:47:39
When I changed jobs and no longer had a company car I managed to get the original company to write a letter confirming that I had never had an accident or insurance claim on their policy for the seven years that I was the driver of company cars (nb. can't be pool cars). Direct Line and Norwich Union (Think they are Aviva now) would accept that as proof of no claims and granted me the equivilent on their policy quotes.

This is going back a while now though, but worth a try.  :y
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: cambscdxv6 on 26 April 2011, 22:50:16
its such a shame the car is a beauty great to drive and hardly used as a rally car but its the old story of check before you buy i guess
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: cambscdxv6 on 26 April 2011, 22:52:56
well yeah i drove comp car for 12 years but opted out due to tax cost so cab get a letter still worth a try i guess might get the price down a bit !!! thanks for the suggestion
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: Andy B on 26 April 2011, 22:54:25
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its such a shame the car is a beauty great to drive and hardly used as a rally car but its the old story of check before you buy i guess

How are you getting quotes? I think you'd be better off phoning brokers & explaining your circumstances rather than confused.com/etc  :y
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: jimac on 27 April 2011, 08:44:52
I'll second the point about getting a letter from your employer or fleet manager.  Many people have dropped out of company car schemes over the last few years so the insurers are used to this situation.  I got a letter from my employers when I did this about 5 years ago and it was accepted as proof of no claims.

Jim.
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: omega2.2auto on 28 April 2011, 19:27:33
had the same problem,had my own buisness and accrued a no claims bonus,after the garage going tits up at xmas i had to insure my own car £345 46 yrs old 5 yrs ncd thought minted.provided proof from last ins co.AVIVA replied saying computer says no,we cant accept that because its a traders policy.grrrrrrrr therefore they quoted me from a jump from £34 a month to £82 per month nearly £600 dearer rip off so choose carefully and thats afer paying nearly £15000 for insurance for the garage.go without it only costs you £150 and 6 points lol
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: aaronjb on 28 April 2011, 19:32:02
I'm also in my 30s with a clean licence, and with 1yrs NCB (my NCB is on my other cars policy sadly, so this is after 'mirroring' the NCB over last year) it still costs me £615 to insure the Elite - that's TPF&T too!

I'm sure it's all part of a ploy to get us to trade in/crush old cars and buy something new instead, which would undoubtedly be cheaper to insure.
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: Osprey on 28 April 2011, 21:39:22
Have you tried putting your Mum on as an additional driver?  (Or any other person of mature years, preferably female.)  Even if she will never actually drive the car it seems to reduce the premium. 

Also worth trying fully comp as this can sometimes be cheaper than TPF&T - sounds daft but true in my experience. 
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: aaronjb on 28 April 2011, 21:53:35
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Also worth trying fully comp as this can sometimes be cheaper than TPF&T - sounds daft but true in my experience. 

I've had that before, too - but not this year.. perhaps they've wised up to that, but the best I could do was £900 FC - and it doesn't seem worth paying that to insure an Omega, somehow.
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: TheBoy on 28 April 2011, 22:20:22
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I'm also in my 30s with a clean licence, and with 1yrs NCB (my NCB is on my other cars policy sadly, so this is after 'mirroring' the NCB over last year) it still costs me £615 to insure the Elite - that's TPF&T too!

I'm sure it's all part of a ploy to get us to trade in/crush old cars and buy something new instead, which would undoubtedly be cheaper to insure.
I insisted my insurance company give me full NCD on my 2nd car when I first got it. After about 30mins negotiation, they agreed - though that was around 4yrs ago. So I now have full NCD on both 'my' cars and Mrs TB has full NCD on hers as well.
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: Bent valve on 29 April 2011, 07:53:47
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I'll second the point about getting a letter from your employer or fleet manager.  Many people have dropped out of company car schemes over the last few years so the insurers are used to this situation.  I got a letter from my employers when I did this about 5 years ago and it was accepted as proof of no claims.
Jim.
Yup, same here. Get a letter, or write one yourself :y
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: SteveAvfc. on 29 April 2011, 09:24:39
I am 50 yrs old have ten yrs+ protected no claims and More than quoted me £959 Fully comp got it down to £368 with swift cover using web site but with them you only get basic extras, but in fairness you have to weigh this against the cost and cost wins for me every time.
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: Captain Slower on 29 April 2011, 11:14:21
I've just had the same "fun" with my insurance company. Moved insurance from a 97 reg BMW728 to my newly purchased MV6 3.0 estate and Mr insurance man tried to increase the price from £693 to £900 for the same cover type. It took several phone calls and haggling over a 3 day period and then me finaly asking to cancel the whole policy before they offered to keep the policy price the same as before. Boc's all of them >:( I have found that post codes play a very big part in whole big rip off process.
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: aaronjb on 29 April 2011, 14:11:14
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Quote
I'm also in my 30s with a clean licence, and with 1yrs NCB (my NCB is on my other cars policy sadly, so this is after 'mirroring' the NCB over last year) it still costs me £615 to insure the Elite - that's TPF&T too!

I'm sure it's all part of a ploy to get us to trade in/crush old cars and buy something new instead, which would undoubtedly be cheaper to insure.
I insisted my insurance company give me full NCD on my 2nd car when I first got it. After about 30mins negotiation, they agreed - though that was around 4yrs ago. So I now have full NCD on both 'my' cars and Mrs TB has full NCD on hers as well.

That's precisely what I was expecting; more fool me for not checking at the time, I suppose.

If I was keeping all three cars I'd go get one of those personal fleet policies - £1200 for the three as opposed to £1100 for two makes sense. But then I'm not intending to keep all three cars (assuming I actually get off my ass and fix the Nissan) :)
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: tigers_gonads on 29 April 2011, 14:13:43
I'm paying 325 quid fully comp on my mig  :y
45 years old / 9 ish protected full NCB
Clean licence

Due renewal in july so I will see what they say  :-/
Title: Re: Insurance
Post by: Humpy on 30 April 2011, 10:00:31
I had exactly the same problem and ended up going with Tesco's who weren't the cheapest but would accept your company car driving record as NCB. Then the next year after I had my NCB confirmed as NCB I went somewhere else. As they say in the as 'Simples'!!!

Humpy